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June 9, 2004
Homily 25 April 2004
By Fr. Hathaway FSSP
Mater Dei Latin Mass Community

Second Sunday after Easter (Good Shepherd Sunday)
On the Rogation Days


Today, three feasts converge: the Feast of St. Mark, the Feast of the Second Sunday after Easter also called Good Shepherd Sunday, and the feast of a Rogation Day.  Of these days, the Second Sunday after Easter receives preference so that is why it is celebrated; the Rogation Day comes next and that is why it is only commemorated.

We will speak on the Rogation Days of the Church.

What are the Rogation days?
The term “rogation” comes from the Latin verb rogo, rogare, (to ask).  The Rogation Days are days to appease divine justice, and to petition for divine protection and blessings.  From ancient times the Church has recognized two types of Rogation Days all in the Spring.  The Major Rogation, or Greater Litany, meaning, “greater supplication,” is held on April 25, also the Feast of St. Mark, and three Minor Rogations, or Lesser Litanies, are held on the three days preceding Ascension Thursday.  These four days are all called Rogation Days as they are all special days of petition.  Ideally, on these days, the Litany of the Saints is chanted in procession followed by a Rogation Mass.

How did they come about?
All authorities agree that Pope St. Gregory the Great codified April 25 as the day to perform the Major Rogation (Greater Litany).  Referencing Canon Moretti, a famous liturgist, Dom Prosper Gueranger O.S.B. (The Liturgical Year, vol. 8) says April 25 was selected because on this day St. Peter entered Rome where he would establish the capital of Christendom.   For this reason the Church of St. Peter was chosen as the Station of the Great Litany and that is also why it is considered greater.   Other sources (Fr. John Hardon’s Dictionary and the 1907 Catholic Encyclopedia) say the Feast of the Major Rogation was introduced to counteract the pagan feast of Robigalia which honored the false god, Robigus with processions and supplications.  These authorities say St. Gregory used this preexisting custom to honor the true God.

But there is nothing prohibiting both reasons as correct.  God could have preordained that these two events would converge on the same date if only to facilitate conversions. 

The three Minor Rogations, held on the three days immediately preceding Ascension Thursday, were introduced in 450 A.D. by Bishop St. Mamertus in his diocese of Vienne in Gual (France).  They were confirmed by the Fifth Council of Orleans in 511 and approved by Pope Leo III (795-816).   Since ancient times, each Minor Rogation Day was celebrated at a particular church in Rome (called station church): Monday at St. Mary Major; Tuesday at St. John of Lateran; and Thursday at St. Peter. 

We will now say the Litany of the Saints to petition our God for protection and favors.  I will put off the vestments and put on a purple stole then kneel at the altar step.  Afterwards, I will re-vest and the Mass will resume.

 But first let me read a lamentation of Dom Prosper Gueranger found on this feast day in his book The Liturgical Year... a book set of 15 volumes which I recommend to you all. 

He writes,
“We take this opportunity of protesting against the negligence of Christians on this subject.  Even persons who have the reputation of being spiritual think nothing of being absent from the Litanies said on St. Mark’s and the Rogation Days.  One would have thought that when the Holy See took from these days the obligation of abstinence (he writes from the mid 1800's) the faithful would be so much the more earnest to join in the duty still left - the duty of prayer.  The people’s presence at the Litanies is taken for granted: and it is simply absurd that a religious rite of public reparation should be one from which almost all should keep away...

“This is one of the many instances which might be brought forward of the strange delusions into which private and isolated devotion is apt to degenerate.  When St. Charles Borromeo first took possession of his See of Milan, he found this negligence among his people, and that they left the clergy to go through the Litanies of April 25 by themselves.  He assisted at them himself, and walked barefooted in the procession.  The people soon followed the sainted pastor’s example.”

While we will not process barefoot, we can at least kneel and pray the Litany of All Saints with a contrite heart... to appease the anger of God which we too much deserve, to ask for divine protection against visible and invisible foes which we dearly need, and to ask God for His blessings whereby we may advance our peace and our desire for heaven which we should want very much.

Finally, I encourage you all to say this Litany on the three days preceding Ascension Thursday.  Our Lord will soon leave us... liturgically speaking.   These are most excellent days in which to ask Him for some parting gifts.  This Litany is a grocery list of most necessary things... for our own salvation, for our families salvation, for the good of the Church and, indeed, for the good of all the world.  And, certainly, the Good Shepherd will not be deaf to our pleas before He bids us  adieu. 



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